Plutarch’s Lives – John Langhorne (1838)

S$135.00

Plutarch’s Lives – John Langhorne (1838)

S$135.00

Title: Plutarch’s Lives, translated from the Original Greek; with Notes, Critical and Historical: and a Life of Plutarch

Author: Plutarch, John Langhorne, William Langhorne (trans.)

Publisher: Thomas Tegg, London, 1838.

Condition: 1/2 leather with marbled boards. Leather noticeably rubbed, but still good. Marbled endpapers. Raised bands to spine, spine still bright. Binding tight, text clean. Inscription to ffep. 747pp. App. 8.5″ by 5.5″.

Plutarch, born Plutarchos (Greek: Πλούταρχος) then named, on his becoming a Roman citizen, Lucius Mestrius Plutarchus (Μέστριος Πλούταρχος), c. 46 – 120 CE, was a Greek historian, biographer, essayist, and Middle Platonist known primarily for his Parallel Lives and Moralia. He was born to a prominent family in Chaeronea, Boeotia, a town about twenty miles east of Delphi.

Plutarch’s Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans, commonly called Parallel Lives or Plutarch’s Lives, is a series of biographies of famous men, arranged in tandem to illuminate their common moral virtues or failings, written in the late 1st Century.

The surviving Parallel Lives as they are more properly and commonly known, contain twenty-three pairs of biographies, each pair consisting of one Greek and one Roman, as well as four unpaired, single lives. It is a work of considerable importance, not only as a source of information about the individuals biographized, but also about the times in which they lived.